New Straits Times

37 YEAR OLD EYES WHITE HOUSE BID

Pete Buttigieg’s star is on the rise in crowded 2020 race

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AT just 37, Pete Buttigieg has deployed to Afghanista­n, graduated from Harvard, learned seven languages and serves as mayor of a Midwestern American city.

Now the Millennial Renaissanc­e man is seeking to become the first openly gay president of the United States — and the youngest — a longshot 2020 prospect whose odds appear to improve by the week.

When he began exploring a challenge to US President Donald Trump, few people outside his home city of South Bend, Indiana knew who the fresh-faced Democrat was, much less how to pronounce his name. (It’s “BOOTedge-edge,” he says.)

Today, he has catapulted into contention for his party’s nomination, suddenly omnipresen­t despite not yet officially declaring his candidacy.

And he’s blazing his own path, with a balance of calm and confidence, problem solving and intellectu­al

ambition that has impressed at campaign stops in early voting states like Iowa and South Carolina.

The Buttigieg buzz has mushroomed quickly.

“This is something real, this is not flash,” former Iowa Democratic Party chair Sue Dvorsky said, as she highlighte­d his mayoral successes and his astute discussion of issues.

He draws sharp contrasts with Trump on multiple fronts including age, government experience, military service, campaign style, and “intellectu­al curiosity”, she added.

“Every single thing about him is in diametric opposition” to Trump, she said.

Buttigieg is relishing his breakout moment, fuelled by a star turn headlining a recent town hall that saw his national profile skyrocket. Bookish and smart, he refutes the charge that he’s too young and inexperien­ced to compete in the diverse Democratic field, or against Trump himself.

“I have more years of government experience under my belt than the president... and more military experience than anybody to walk into that office on day one since George H.W. Bush,” he said at the event broadcast by CNN.

“So I get that I’m the young guy in the conversati­on, but I would say experience is what qualifies me to have a seat at this table.”

In Iowa, Buttigieg surged from one per cent support to 11 per cent and third place in Emerson Polling’s survey released last Sunday, behind former vice-president Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders and ahead of more prominent candidates like senators Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren.

He has proved he can raise allimporta­nt campaign donations, pulling in US$600,000 (RM2.4 million) in the 24 hours after his town hall.

In 2016, as Hillary Clinton battled Trump, Buttigieg noticed a “fatal lack of enthusiasm” among working-class voters in the heartland when it came to the Democratic message.

This cycle, his party must reengage with disaffecte­d Midwestern­ers who supported Trump, he said.

“Our whole message was ‘Don’t vote for him, because he’s terrible.’ And even though he is, that’s not a message,” warned Buttigieg on The Breakfast Club radio show in New York.

“I hate to say it, but he could absolutely win again if we aren’t smart about this.”

As mayor, Buttigieg worked — and sometimes clashed — with Indiana’s then-governor Mike Pence, a religious conservati­ve who is now vice-president.

The former Rhodes Scholar came out as gay while running for re-election — and won with 80 per cent of the vote.

He is married to husband Chasten Glezman, a teacher.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Pete Buttigieg speaking to the media before campaignin­g in San Francisco, California on Thursday.
AFP PIC Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Pete Buttigieg speaking to the media before campaignin­g in San Francisco, California on Thursday.

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